Ethical Considerations in Fetal Cardiology.
Stefani SamplesRupali GandhiJoyce L WooAngira PatelPublished in: Journal of cardiovascular development and disease (2024)
Fetal cardiology has evolved over the last 40 years and changed the timing of diagnosis and counseling of congenital heart disease, decision-making, planning for treatment at birth, and predicting future surgery from the postnatal to the prenatal period. Ethical issues in fetal cardiology transect multiple aspects of biomedical ethics including improvement in prenatal detection and diagnostic capabilities, access to equitable comprehensive care that preserves a pregnant person's right to make decisions, access to all reproductive options, informed consent, complexity in shared decision-making, and appropriate use of fetal cardiac interventions. This paper first reviews the literature and then provides an ethical analysis of accurate and timely diagnosis, equitable delivery of care, prenatal counseling and shared decision-making, and innovation through in utero intervention.
Keyphrases
- decision making
- pregnant women
- congenital heart disease
- healthcare
- palliative care
- randomized controlled trial
- cardiac surgery
- quality improvement
- minimally invasive
- public health
- thoracic surgery
- smoking cessation
- left ventricular
- coronary artery bypass
- heart failure
- big data
- acute kidney injury
- hepatitis c virus
- hiv testing
- machine learning
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- chronic pain
- coronary artery disease
- hiv infected
- quantum dots
- antiretroviral therapy